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Reviews Around The Web
Choose Web Reviews from this Maker:
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Saturday, December 6, 2008
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Fighting it out with the Radeo
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Wednesday, September 10, 2008
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NVIDIA's new GeForce 9400 GT Series is based on the same G96 GPU that is also used on the 9500 GT. The 9400 GT has half the shaders however, which seriously limits the uses of the card in a gaming PC. On the other hand this greatly reduces the heat output which allows a completely passive solution. Point of View differentiates their card by using 1 GB of video memory and bundling a full version of the Wall-E game.
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Monday, September 1, 2008
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I've never had the chance to look at a graphics card from Point of View before, but now is as good a time as any to start. When word came through that the first card the company would ever be sending to me would be the 9500 GT, I felt kind of sorry for them. Clearly they didn't read my original review of the 9500 GT from Leadtek. I made my thoughts pretty clear on the card, offering half the performance of the 9600 GSO but not half the price. This absolutely killed any form of value for money the product offered. Apart from being cheap, there wasn't really much else the card could offer; even if you were extremely tight when it came to the money side of things, we recommended that you simply bite your lip for a few more weeks and save to buy something from the 9600 series.
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Friday, July 4, 2008
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At this time NVIDIA's new GTX 260 graphics cards are positioned to be quite a bit more expensive than ATI's similar performing HD 4870. However, NVIDIA includes support for CUDA and PhysX. We also saw amazing overclocking potential on our GTX 260 card, even surpassing the $200 more expensive GTX 280.
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Tuesday, June 17, 2008
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With the release of nVidia's latest GTX 200 platform today, we see a possibility of tremendous change one more time- although its more on the lines of evolutionary than revolutionary. The GPU continues its war against the CPU with nVidia delivering the CUDA platform that allows your graphics card to offload a lot more stuff from the CPU in a much easier fashion. And its bitchin fast for gaming as well. Lets say hello to the two lovely ladies- the nVidia GeForce GTX 260 and the GTX 280.
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Wednesday, April 18, 2007
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Everyone must surely remember the introduction of the GeForce 8800 series on the last quater of last year by NVIDIA. Well, about 6 months later it is time to reveal again a new product range from NVIDIA which is focussed towards the mid-range graphics card market. They have successfully introduced the first DirectX 10 compliant graphics accelerators for the high-end market, and well now is the moment to do the same for the mid-range segment. This is where the Point of View GeForce 8600 series comes into the picture, and NVIDIA has again two versions available. The first one being the GeForce 8600 GTS, and a lower version with the GT suffix.
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Sunday, April 23, 2006
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Today we take a look at the Point of View 7900 GTX, which is based on the current high end chip from NVIDIA, the G71. The GeForce 7900 Series was introduced during CeBIT this year, and has replaced the old 7800 Series line up. A major change is the increased clock speed of 650 MHz on the core and 1600 MHz on the GDDR3 memory. While the card is not exactly budget at $499 it is still cheaper than most other 7900 GTX cards from the competition...
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